Jul 19

A New York Times article today titled “Radiation-Tainted Beef Spreads Through Japan’s Markets” paints a worrisome picture of the radiation situation in Japan.  Or does it?

It’s hard for JET alums outside of Japan to know what to think all the time.  I suppose it’s just as hard for JETs in Japan to know what to think.  But you guys have to actually do–or not do–something about it.  So I thought it might be helpful to get a sense of how much or little the radiation issue is affecting the lives of JETs (and JET alums) in Japan.

How are JETs in Japan reacting?  Are you worried?  Is the NY Times article too alarmist?  Are you changing eating and travel behaviors in any way?

Please share any thoughts in the comments section, or e-mail them to jetwit [at] jetwit.com if you prefer to post anonymously.

Thanks.


Jul 19

Ishinomaki 2.0

Via the Japan Earthquake Disaster Relief Idea Exchange Facebook group started by Atlanta-based JET Emily Duncan.  My Japanese isn’t good enough to quickly figure out the gist of it or even who created it.  But it seemed compelling enough to merit sharing.  Please feel free to post any comments or thoughts about the site for the benefit of other readers.

Ishinomaki 2.0

http://ishinomaki2.com/


Jul 19

Fundraising: JETAA Sydney Trivia Night Fundraiser for Japan

 

JETAA Trivia and Fundraiser for Japan

Come along this Saturday night to the 2011 JETAA trivia night. Bring you friends, meet new people and test your knowledge of all things Japanese and Australian as you compete for a range of great prizes.

This year’s trivia night will be an extra special event, with all proceeds raised on the night being donated to the Red Cross (Japan) Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami Appeal.

Time: 6:30pm, Saturday 23 July
(Questions commence at 7pm sharp so arrive by 6:30pm to get your team organised!)

Place: Parkview Hotel, 178-180 Mitchell Road, Alexandria
(The closest station is Erskineville, and there is lots of parking near the venue)

Entry: $20 per person (Includes catering and you can purchase drinks at the bar)

Please RSVP by Thursday via the Sydney JETAA Facebook group or email sydney@jetalumni.org so we can confirm numbers for catering.


Jul 19

Thanks to Matt Gillam of CLAIR NY for forwarding this on.

ペットボトルのボートで琵琶湖を横断したダスティ・ウイットマンさん(右)とロキシィ・ボロウスカさん=大津市今堅田3丁目の真野浜

Apparently two Shiga JETs covered the two kilometers between Moriyama and Otsu in a little over an hour to raise approximately300,000 yen. Based on the katakana, I believe their names are Dusty Wittman and Roxy Borowska. (Thanks to Katie Jardine for the name correction!)

2011年7月16日21時46分

ペットボトル船で琵琶湖横断 震災孤児への募金呼びかけ

東日本大震災で親を失った震災孤児への募金を呼びかけようと、滋賀県内の高校に勤務する外国語指導助手(ALT)の2人が16日、ペットボトル815本を使った長さ約2メートルのボートで琵琶湖を横断した。

挑戦したのは米国出身のダスティ・ウイットマンさん(30)と英国出身のロキシィ・ボロウスカさん(26)。守山市から対岸の大津市まで約2キロを 1時間 余りで横断した。米国では募金を求める「本気度」をパフォーマンスで示すことが多いといい、ALTの仲間や高校生らとペットボトルを集めて準備。2人は 「大好きな日本の子どものため、思いを行動で示したかった」と話す。

2人は3日から募金サイト(http://ilovenihon.com/)などで義援金を募り、国内外から約30万円が寄せられているという。ボロウスカさんは「地元の人も一緒に盛り上げてくれてうれしかった。今後も支援を訴えていきたい」と話す。


Jul 19

New group: JET Alum Health Professionals

After meeting Portland-based mental health counselor and JETAA Portland officer Roy Huggins (Hokkaido, Sapporo-shi) at the JETAA USA Conference in D.C. this past weekend and realizing there were two other attendees who are also health professionals (JETAA Texoma’s Chieko Rothengass and Dennis Li are both researchers), we thought it might make sense to create a …..

JET Alum Health Professionals Group on LinkedIn

http://www.linkedin.com/e/ai06o5-gqax67os-a/vgh/4008893/

So if you’re a therapist, a doctor, a nurse, a researcher, a nutritionist or in any other line of work (or aspire to be) that has some connection to health, please join!

Also a reminder that there are a whole host of other JET Alum LinkedIn groups to join (e.g., law, policy & government, MEFs, media professionals, etc.) as well as the JET alum LinkedIn groups by prefecture.


Jul 18

JETAA USA Conference a big success in DC

Major props to JETAA DC for putting on an extremely substantive and energizing JETAA USA National Conference–just what we all needed in a very challenging year.

More details and info to come when I have time to gather thoughts and info and get them posted.


Jul 18

“Thank You” from the Women’s World Cup Champions Japan


Jul 18

Justin’s Japan: Lincoln Center Festival Premieres ‘Temple of the Golden Pavilion’

J-pop singer Go Morita stars in director Amon Miyamoto's stage adaptation of 'The Temple of the Golden Pavilion' for the Lincoln Center Festival July 21-24. (Miow Hirota)

 

By JQ magazine editor Justin Tedaldi (CIR Kobe-shi, 2001-02) for Examiner.com. Visit his page here for related stories.

On Thursday (July 21), this year’s edition of the Lincoln Center Festival will present the U.S. theatrical premiere of director Amon Miyamoto’s The Temple of the Golden Pavilion, based on Kinkakuji, the celebrated 1956 novel by Japan’s storied 20th century writer Yukio Mishima.

With a script co-written by Miyamoto and playwright Chihiro Ito, the play will run through July 24 at Columbus Center’s elegant Rose Theater.The Temple of the Golden Pavilion is a stunning tale of the power of beauty and its corruption of the mind of a young monk, Mizoguchi, who becomes obsessed with beauty’s destruction. This groundbreaking work paints an intensely personal picture of Japan in the crucible of the Second World War.

A native of Tokyo and the artistic director of the new Kanagawa Arts Theatre in Yokohama, Miyamoto hosted a special lecture last month at New York’s Japan Society. He made his Lincoln Center Festivaldebut in 2002 with a memorable production of Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman’s Pacific Overtures at Avery Fisher Hall, which moved on to the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and a Broadway revival from 2004 to 2005.

For the complete story, click here.


Jul 18

JQ Magazine: Film Review – ‘Sword of Desperation’ and ‘The Last Ronin’ at JAPAN CUTS 2011

A scene from 'Sword of Desperation,' screened in New York last week as part of the JAPAN CUTS film festival. (Courtesy of Japan Society)

 

By Paul Benson (Fukui-ken, 2006-08) for JQ magazine. Paul is a New York-based freelance translator who has handled assignments ranging from securities law to cookbooks.

This past week I had the pleasure of seeing two films in Japan Society’s annual JAPAN CUTS film festival. The festival runs from July 7-21, with 32 films (nearly all of them premieres). I was instantly drawn to JAPAN CUTS’ only two jidaigeki 時代劇 samurai films in the series, Sword of Desperation 「必死剣鳥刺し」 and The Last Ronin 「最後の忠臣蔵」. The films were wonderful, and I encourage you to seek them out.

Sword of Desperation (2010, dir. Hideyuki Hirayama) is a poised and powerful film of feudal intrigues and expert swordsmen, a fine addition to the chanbara チャンバラ (“sword-fighting”) genre. Set in the Edo Period (1600-1868), Sword of Desperation has all the genre’s usual devices: a gradual build-up to an outburst of action, an alienated master swordsman, and conflicts of duty and heart.

The film’s first half beautifully establishes the circumstances, characters and their relationships. Etsushi Toyokawa plays the character Sanzaemon Kanemi, a master swordsman, who serves the daimyo Tabu Ukyō (Jun Murakami). At the start of the film (set three years ago), Kanemi murders his master’s favorite concubine, Lady Renko (Megumi Seki), just after the annual spring Noh performance. It soon becomes clear that Kanemi acted to stop Lady Renko from further manipulating the daimyo and damaging the domain’s administration. Kanemi is given a light sentence—a year of house arrest and a meager pay decrease—and he is allowed to return to service afterward. Yet, he soon finds himself losing his wife Mutsue (Naho Toda), faced with the affections of his niece, and lost in the intrigues of others, a situation to which blood is the only way out.

While the pacing of the film might feel disjointed and sluggish to the unfamiliar, anyone acquainted with the chanbara genre is in for a treat. The previous two chanbara films I’ve seen are When the Last Sword Is Drawn 「壬生義士伝」 (2003, dir. Yōjirō Takita) and Sword of Doom 「大菩薩峠」 (1966, dir. Kihachi Okamoto). These didn’t disappoint, and neither does Sword of Desperation. The film has beautiful sets and scenery, a simple but moving plot, and a great twist at the end.

Read More


Jul 18

*****************

Thanks to Andy Anderson, father of Taylor Anderson, for sharing information and the video link below.  FYI, JETAA USA had the honor of Mr. Anderson attending the National Conference this past weekend in Washington, D.C. and speaking to the conference attendees (2 representatives from each JETAA chapter in the U.S.)

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced an exchange program on June 24, 2011 (press release here) to send 32 American students to Japan as a way of commemorating the work of Taylor Anderson and Monty Dickson.  Those students, who come from all over the U.S., have been selected and are now in San Francisco getting ready to depart for Japan.

The majority of the 10 day program takes place in Japan and includes a pre-departure orientation and a wrap-up meeting and farewell dinner in San Francisco. During their stay in Japan, the participants will have an option of participating in a day trip to visit the Tohoku area.

KTVU (San Francisco) did a story on the student group as they gathered in San Francisco for a pre-departure orientation before heading to Japan.  Here’s the link to the video:  http://www.ktvu.com/video/28580191/index.html

Minasan ganbatte kudasai!

Note: If anyone can figure out how to get the embed code for the video, e-mail it to jetwit [at] jetwit.com so we can post it here.

Update 7/21/2011: Here’s a Japanese article about the event, forwarded by Andy Anderson:

http://sankei.jp.msn.com/world/news/110718/amr11071818190005-n1.htm

2011年07月18日
日米の懸け橋へ努力
日本研修に向け米高校生

【サンフランシスコ共同】東日本大震災で犠牲になった米国人の英語教師2人の業績をたたえ、創設された日本研修事業に参加する米国の高校生32人の壮行会が17日、サンフランシスコの日本総領事館で行われた。代表のトーマス・クドさんは「帰ったら、この体験と日本語を生かしたい」と話し、日米の懸け橋となるために努力することを誓った。猪俣弘司(いのまた・ひろし)総領事は、大震災で亡くなった外国青年招致事業(JETプログラム)の英語教師テーラー・アンダーソンさんとモンゴメリー・ディクソンさんの死を悼み、「研修を成功させるかどうかは皆さん次第」と激励した。米側のデボラ・ダニエルズさんは「同じ高校生がどんな風に(大震災で)被災し、どんなことを考えて毎日暮らしているのか知りたい」と話した。一行は今月19~28日、大阪の地元高校生との交流や、ホームステイを体験。京都訪問のほか、希望者による岩手視察も予定されている。


Jul 17

Japan Women Win World Cup!

Omedetou to Japan Women’s Soccer for an amazingly resilient World Cup victory!

The JET Alumni community everywhere is cheering.

Honto ni o-tsukare sama deshita.


Jul 14

Posted by Tom Baker (Chiba-ken, 1989-91), coauthor of The Sushi Lover’s Cookbook and Tokyo Chic and contributor to Time Out Tokyo and Time Out Shortlist Tokyo. He blogs as “Tokyo Tom Baker.”

Did you ever go to the beach during your time in Japan? In particular, did you ever visit Suma beach in Kobe? Photographer Robin Haseba has an exhibition of portraits of Suma beach-goers currently running in Shinjuku, Tokyo, that may bring back some memories.

When I visited the show on its opening day, I briefly met Haseba and later sent him some questions by e-mail for an article on my blog. You can read my comments on Haseba’s work, and see some examples of it, here.


Jul 13

JETAA North Carolina Subchapter on the move

New JETAA subchapter activity has been detected in North Carolina, thanks to some outreach by Kay Munn who has gotten a JETAA Southeast North Carolina Subchapter Facebook page up and running!

Here’s the link:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/jetaasenc

And here’s a message from Kay:

“Hello everyone! If you’re currently living in NC (or moving here soon!) we’re trying to get a subchapter up and running over here. Feel free to join our Facebook page :)”

Welcome to the JETAA SE North Carolina subchapter! The NC subchapter was started to help connect former, current, and aspiring JETs with the North Carolina community. Connect with other JETs in North Carolina and help us teach our community about our second home, Japan.

E-mail:  jetaasenc [at] groups.facebook.com


Jul 13

Job: Sales for Japanese Freight Forwarding Company (East Rutherford, NJ)

Via Actus. Posted by Dipika Soni (Ishikawa-ken, 2003-06). Dipika has recently moved back to London and is currently looking for new work opportunities related to Japan, translation, or other fields.

———————————————————————————————————————————-

***Note: If you apply for this position, please let them know you learned of it from JETwit. Thanks.***

Job Position: Sales for Japanese Freight Forwarding Company (East Rutherford, NJ)

Job Details:

Your Role with the Company:

  • There are 10 employees in the Ocean Department.
  • You will be in charge of new business development and account management.
  • Mainly outside sales.
  • Preferred Experience and Skills:
    Some Experience in Ocean Sales and/ or Logistics

    Business Hours:
    9am to 6pm, Exempt
    Read More


    Jul 13

    Job: Sales Rep for Japanese Food Company (Boston)

    Via Actus (and forwarded to JETwit by New England JETAA). Posted by Dipika Soni (Ishikawa-ken, 2003-06). Dipika has recently moved back to London and is currently looking for new work opportunities related to Japan, translation, or other fields.

    ———————————————————————————————————————————-

    ***Note: If you apply for this position, please let them know you learned of it from JETwit. Thanks.***

    Job Position: Sales Rep for Japanese Food Company (Boston)

    Job Details:

    Your Role with the Company:

  • As a Sales Representative of this Japanese Food Wholesale/Trading Company, you will be in charge of first managing existing customers to promote food and kitchen tools merchandise and follow up with them by visiting them often and communicating with them by phone and email.
  • Will be the point of contact for the customers about the company’s services and products. In order to build a good and trusting relationship with customers, you may help them with merchandise restocking or conducting promotion events of certain products.
  • Read More


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